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Fosfomycin Versus Standard of Care in Children With Antibiotic-resistant Urinary Tract Infections: A Non-inferiority, Pragmatic, Multi-centre Adaptive Trial to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability, Efficacy and Pharmacokinetics of Oral Fosfomycin in Children With Antibiotic-resistant Urinary Tract Infections. (FosUTI)

NCT05709028 Phase 3 RECRUITING

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are among the most common bacterial infections in children. Up to 50% of UTI's are caused by multi-drug resistant ESBL-producing gram negative bacteria that do not respond to treatment with oral penicillin's or cephalosporins. Instead, children often require hospital admission to receive broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics when they may otherwise be safely managed at home; resulting in prolonged hospital stays and an increased use of health resources. Fosfomycin is a broad-spectrum antibiotic discovered in 1969 that remains susceptible to a large number of organisms due to its low international use. Fosfomycin can be prepared as an oral solution with an orange/tangerine flavour and is currently approved for use in females \>12 years old. Despite extensive evidence of its efficacy in adults and safety in neonates, the use of fosfomycin in children remains limited and fosfomycin is not currently licensed for use in children \<12 years old in Australia. The aim of this clinical trial is to compare the use of oral fosfomycin against standard of care antibiotics for the treatment of antibiotic resistant urinary tract infections in children. The main questions the trial aims to answer are: 1. Is oral fosfomycin non-inferior in efficacy to the current standard of care for the treatment of antibiotic-resistant urinary tract infections in children? 2. Is oral fosfomycin a safe and well-tolerated antibiotic in children? 3. What is the best dosing regimen of oral fosfomycin for the treatment of antibiotic-resistant UTIs in children?

Details

Lead sponsorUniversity of Sydney
PhasePhase 3
StatusRECRUITING
Enrolment300
Start date2023-08-02
Completion2027-08

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Interventions

Primary outcomes

Countries

Australia